If you have ever had money in escrow, as is common during the process of home buying, you may have lost escrow amounts unbeknownst to you at that time. The process is easy enough. You put money in escrow, and whether you purchased the house or backed out at the last minute, you expected all the money to ether go to the real estate agent and previous owner or back into your bank account if you declined the offer. In any case, you may have lost escrow amounts owed to you. To retrieve your lost escrow amounts, point your browser to Cash Unclaimed, a massive database that is designed to help you find that very amount of money that you may have lost.

What Happens If You Find Lost Escrow Amounts?

If you search the Cash Unclaimed database trying to retrieve your lost escrow amounts and you happen to make a match, you’ll be able to see instantly how much money you have hanging out there in limbo. For many people, they’re completely unaware that there’s a thousand dollars or more sitting in a lost escrow account in a treasury office somewhere. These people would be very pleased to know that you can retrieve your lost escrow amounts by searching for your first and last name on Cash Unclaimed.

A lot of people not only don’t realize that they have any funds out there under their names but many don’t really understand how these funds came to be lost in the first place. With lost escrow amounts it is easy to understand how the sum comes into play from the beginning. A title or escrow company will create a pad and over collect on fees to make sure anything that might come up will be covered. Like an additional inspection or a re certification on the appraisal once more conditions are met and signed off on. Many times, especially in new purchases or with first time home buyers, people don’t realize that there was a pad being held or that they are in fact entitled to a refund of whatever was not used.

Many times in a loan closing the refunded pad will be sent automatically by check to the borrowers address but what if that address is no longer where they reside or maybe it was an address of a family member so they could qualify for the loan or what not. In these cases these checks either end up coming back to sit in your escrow account with the title company or sometimes they just get lost completely. In other cases when the loan is either commercial or has to do with construction, these pads are much higher and are not even settled out to see what is left for years, usually until completion of the construction. This should flag anyone and everyone who has ever had a loan to think about their last close and see if they remember being refunded any of their pad from escrow.

If you think that you may have lost escrow accounts out there, and even if you’re just curious, you owe it to yourself to pay Cash Unclaimed a little visit. There are billions of dollars in unclaimed or missing money in treasury offices and in corporate accounts nationwide. Cash Unclaimed can help you uncover any of that money, including lost escrow amounts.

Even if it’s ten dollars, it’ll be worth it; but like most lost escrow amounts, it’s probably worth much more.

Take your chances to search and retrieve your lost escrow amounts. With billions of dollars to contend with and with many treasury offices claiming one in eight people to be the rightful owner of missing money, you just might retrieve your lost escrow amounts after all.

This entry was posted
on Thursday, July 18th, 2013 at 10:32 am and is filed under lost escrow amounts.
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total dollar amount in unclaimed funds that we show reported by the appropriate
government agencies. This does not guarantee that this money is 100% absolutely
yours. What it means is that there is that total dollar amount shown by
government agencies under your name and common variations of your name at
the last time we had the information available to us was reported as unclaimed
and is able to have a claim form submitted to be paid that amount. For more
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